B.A. LL.B. (Hons.) (NLSIU Bangalore)
LL.M. (London School of Economics)
S.J.D. (University of California, Los Angeles)
Professor and Executive Director, Centre on Public Law and Jurisprudence
| sbaudh@jgu.edu.in | |
| Connect with me | |
| Key Expertise | Constitutional Law Criminal Law Public International Law Human Rights Law Jurisprudence Critical Race Theory South Asian studies race, caste,religion, sex, gender and sexuality. |
B.A. LL.B. (Hons.) (NLSIU Bangalore)
LL.M. (London School of Economics)
S.J.D. (University of California, Los Angeles)
Sumit Baudh (they/he) is Professor and Executive Director of the Centre on Public Law and Jurisprudence at O.P. Jindal Global University (JGU). A former British Chevening Scholar and the inaugural Fulbright-Nehru Visiting Chair in Civil and Human Rights at Emory University, Baudh has held several prestigious fellowships, including the University of California Human Rights Fellowship (Berkeley), the Michael D. Palm Fellowship at the Williams Institute (UCLA School of Law), a Fellowship at the Center for Intersectionality and Social Policy Studies (Columbia Law School), and the Transnational Law Institute Fellowship (King’s College London).
Qualified to practice law as an Advocate in India and enrolled as a Solicitor (n.p.) with The Law Society of England & Wales, Baudh has also worked as an independent consultant, advising organizations such as the Arcus Foundation (U.S.), the United Nations Development Programme (India), the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, and LLH (Norway).
Baudh is currently completing a monograph titled Law at the Intersection of Caste, Class, and Sex.
At the JGU /JGLS (2017-present)
Core courses:
Elective courses:
Safety Or Control? Women’s Dress Policing In Indian Educational Institutes And Its False Grounds (2026). Society, Feminism In India, Apr. 23 (available at https://feminisminindia.com/2026/04/23/safety-or-control-womens-dress-policing-in-indian-educational-institutes-and-its-false-grounds/)
The paradox of making gender-fluid lives legible to the law (2026). Scroll, Apr. 18 (available at https://scroll.in/article/1091966/the-paradox-of-making-gender-fluid-lives-legible-to-the-law)
How India's laws still struggle to dismantle caste system (2026), Deutsche Welle, Apr. 14 (available at https://p.dw.com/p/5C7JV); also carried on Dailyhunt (news aggregation platform)
Twenty years of coming out as Dalit (2026), Frontline, Apr. 9 (available at https://frontline.thehindu.com/the-nation/human-rights/queer-dalit-identity-visibility-india-analysis/article70841458.ece)
Self-identification and the transgender law: An Ambedkarite view (2026). The News Minute, Apr. 9 (available at https://www.thenewsminute.com/amp/story/voices/self-identification-and-the-transgender-law-an-ambedkarite-view). Republished by Newslaundry, Apr. 10 (available at https://www.newslaundry.com/amp/story/2026%2F04%2F10%2Fself-identification-and-the-transgender-law-an-ambedkarite-view). Also featured on inkle (news aggregation platform)
Recognition without protection: The flaw in India’s anti-discrimination logic (2026), Opinion Column, Indian Express, Mar. 30. (available at https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/ugc-equity-transgender-persons-act-flaw-india-anti-discrimination-10609584/)
Who Gets To Be “Unlimited”? Feminism, Caste, And The Politics Of Limit-Breaking (2026). Culture, Feminism In India, Mar. 2 (available at https://feminisminindia.com/2026/03/02/who-gets-to-be-unlimited-feminism-caste-and-the-politics-of-limit-breaking/)
Seen, then forgotten: The limits of queer visibility in India (2026). The News Minute, Feb. 26 (available at https://www.thenewsminute.com/news/seen-then-forgotten-the-limits-of-queer-visibility-in-india)
Ten years after Rohith Vemula’s death, why campus reforms still fall short (2026). All That Matters, Sunday Times of India, Jan. 18 (available at https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/blogs/voices/ten-years-after-rohith-vemulas-death-why-campus-reforms-still-fall-short/)
| sbaudh@jgu.edu.in | |
| Key Expertise | Constitutional Law Criminal Law Public International Law Human Rights Law Jurisprudence Critical Race Theory South Asian studies race, caste,religion, sex, gender and sexuality. |